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No such thing as Rape Culture redux

Well many cases are like that. This case in particular is such a case where witnesses said they were both drunk and both willing participants. I say that it was most likely just a consensual hookup but if you insist it must have been some sort of sexual assault because they were drunk, then they are surely equally guilty.

Actually, Derec, I've linked and quoted witnesses who said that she was regretful and wanted to stop and witnesses who claimed she was drunk. I haven't seen anything that claimed that he was drunk. YU claims they were both willing. It seems that initially this was true. Whether or not this remained true, I cannot say because there isn't enough evidence in articles which rely entirely on Yu's point of view. Also, unless you have information to the contrary (in which case, please link and quote), we have no way of actually knowing that they were equally drunk.

I have stated previously the two conditions which would have made it rape:

1. If she wanted to stop and was prevented from doing so.
2. If she was too drunk to consent.

Do you disagree that these would be conditions which would make the sex rape?



In fact, actual studies have demonstrated that rapists are most often sober and not under the influence of drugs or alcohol.
What studies? Also, that is probably true for actual rapists. But there are also many consensual, mutually drunken hookups that are being called "rapes" because the girl regrets the sex the next day (or year) and cries rape. The cases I bring up are usually such mutually drunken hookups. As you said, "rapists are most often sober" and these guys weren't.

I've linked in this thread. Feel free to read the links.

Again: different levels of inebriation would lead to differing levels of capacity to consent, as you have admitted.
Nothing to admit here, as it is pretty non-controversial in the abstract. The problem arises from proving just how drunk they both were at a later date. In the Vassar case we have alleged witnesses (probably Walker's friends though) say that she "appeared drunk". Her appearing drunk is in no way evidence that she was "too drunk to consent" and Yu should not have been punished over that incident.

At least one of those witnesses was Yu's former girlfriend. So perhaps she was vengeful, perhaps there is just a huge conspiracy against Yu. But the witnesses were concerned enough to try to contact campus security when they saw her walking with Yu. That would indicate to me that she must have appeared to be really drunk.


Similarly in the Occidental case the witnesses say they were both drunk but also both willing. How one can construe the girl's victimhood and the guy's culpability from that requires some serious gender bias!

I know of no feminist nor any individual who claims that the responsibility is 'always on the man.' Certainly I have never made such a claim.
It's what the feminist opinions in these cases boil down to. If they are both drunk, the guy is punished and the girl declared a "victim". Without exception.

I call bullshit. For one thing, that is not my position.

Except for the witnesses.
No witnesses said she told him to stop and he didn't. None whatsoever!

His room mate said she wanted to stop and that she expressed regrets saying she wasn't ready for anything new. What hasn't been said is if she tried to leave and was prevented from doing so. But the articles rely only on Yu.


Later, Walker put a condom on Yu and they got down until his roommate unexpectedly showed up, after which Walker “began to lament about her ex-boyfriend and stated that she was not ready to jump into ‘anything new,’ ” then got dressed and left after noting how she “took Peter Yu’s virginity,” the suit says.
Seems like post-coital regrets and in is in no way evidence of non-consent. In fact, the language, that she "took" his virginity, implies active participation on her part. Look at the last three words - that is part of the lawsuit and is used as evidence for the plaintiff (Yu)!
Let's look at something else from the article:
she sent him a Facebook e-mail the day after their one-night stand saying she “had a wonderful time.”
This exculpatory evidence and should be enough to seal the lawsuit for Yu.
Sounds as though she wanted to stop.
At that point she had already stopped.
The article is told entirely from Yu's perspective and it isn't clear whether he attempted to stop her from leaving or forced her to continue to have sex, which would have been rape, just as if he wanted to stop and she did not, it would have been rape.
I don't see that possibility from the language used at all. She didn't tell him to stop, in fact it is pretty clear they were already finished when the roommate walked in.

They may have been finished but to me, it is not clear that was the case.


"Appeared to be drunk" is very vague and does not go at all into whether she was too drunk to consent. It does not say that she could barely walk, or unable to speak coherently etc. which would be indicative of extreme intoxication. She even managed to put a condom on him which requires the level of hand-eye coordination and fine motor skills lacking in severely intoxicated.

HE says she put the condom on him. And no, it doesn't require that much coordination or fine motor skills.


We actually don't know what the entire body of evidence or testimony was presented against Yu. We have only his side of the story and even that does not make it clear that it was not rape: his room mate indicates she didn't want to start anything new (and the quote makes her sound pretty sloppy drunk) and other witnesses report her appearing to be drunk. You may be correct: he could have been treated unfairly but it is not possible for us to know given the very slim details in online articles told entirely from Yu's perspective.
The "not wanting to start anything new" was said after they had sex, not before. She can't retroactively withdraw consent. And there are plenty of red flags about this case - it being decided solely by her father's colleagues (she didn't want a student representative), him being not allowed to question witnesses, the case being brought a year after the fact.

You are vastly overrating the fact that the case was decided by professors who were her father's colleagues. Trust me. I've spent a fair amount of time around academics. Getting 3 to agree on anything is not easy.

Derec, it's actually a very serious issue, and one where much education needs to be done. Many of the childhood victims of sexual abuse by priests did not term what happened to them as 'rape' because they didn't believe that it could happen to a boy (in the case of male victims. Although they are not prominently featured in news articles, there are plenty of female victims as well) or that whatever a priest (or coach, or teacher or favorite uncle, etc.) did was ok. Even Mary Kay Letourneau's victim, aka her now husband, does not see that a 35 year old woman having sex with a 12 year old as rape but clearly, it is.
At the same time college girls are adults and thus merely having sex with them is not rape which makes it unlike these cases where we basically have adolescents being taken advantage of. I assume college girls would know if they were being raped or sexually assaulted, no matter what Ms. magazine or this article says.

The article is not from Ms Magazine and perhaps you would be actually better informed and in a better position to form an opinion if you read the article.

Adults--intelligent, well educated adults--often struggle with identifying assault as abuse because of the shame involved, because they may have grown up in abusive situations and see it as normal, because the assailant is otherwise a 'nice guy' or because they are dependent on the assailant. A lot of reasons. I've listened to plenty as I took people to ERs.


In many cultures, both men and women believe that a woman (or child) must submit to a man, regardless. And if the two are unmarried, it is her fault, even if she is a child. She is often severely punished.
Relevance to US college campuses?

People are people, Derec. Goes to the fact that our ideas of what is rape and who is at fault are evolving. We're not all on the same page.

In the U.S., the fact that men can be rape victims is just now gaining popular acceptance. Until about 20-30 years ago, in most states, a husband could legally force his wife to have sex and it was not deemed rape. I've known people who did not count beatings which resulted in black eyes, broken bones, etc. to be 'abuse.' He just lost his temper. I provoked it. And of course, male victims have an even harder time coming to grips with the fact that they are being abused.
The problem with marital rape is being able to prove it and possibility of false claims being used to punish the husband if the marriage is on the rocks.

Sadly, you think that is the problem. Not that one spouse might rape the person they are supposed to love and cherish and whose welfare should be first and foremost. Not the betrayal, not the harm done to the victim, to children, to society.

Vengeful females. THAT'S the problem. Got it.

Too many people still believe that if you dress a certain way, or drink too much or flirted with someone or if he bought you dinner or if you've had sex with him before or if you are married, then it cannot be rape.
It can be rape, but just because she was drinking does not make consensual sex into rape.

No, but 'too drunk' means no consent and that means rape. But thank you for at least admitting it can be rape.

A handsome athlete cannot be a rapist: don't all women want to sleep with him?
It certainly is a valid question. Not that he cannot be a rapist but that needs to be proven, not assumed. On the other hand, successful athletes are good targets for extortion.

Derec, there is not a man alive now or at any time in history that ALL women wanted to sleep with. The question would be why would a man who likely had so many options of willing partners choose someone who was unwilling or too drunk to resist?

That does happen. Sometimes they post Youtube videos boasting about it.

Even if she was passed out at the time, she surely wanted it.
Another thing that would need to be proven, not merely assumed. Do you have a case in mind?

Derec, if she or he was passed out, she or he was too drunk to consent. Period.
 
I once saw a man wearing a "Free Mike Tyson" T-shirt. I asked him what that was about. He said, "She knew what she was getting into."
 
It's a standard for tort cases, not all civil cases. Particularly, colleges that used "clear and convincing proof" for sexual claims still use if for all other internal cases. They are however not allowed to use that standard for sexual cases courtesy of the Obama administration.
That is untrue. The Obama administration says it will not consider the use of "clear and convincing proof" for sexual claims to be consistent with Title IX.

I already explained that they are greater and more lopsided that tort cases in some detail. Instead of responding to my argument you repeat your mantra. And yes, they are not criminal cases which is why this type of case usually uses the "clear and convincing proof" standard which is not quite as strict as "beyond a reasonable doubt" but still preserves the feature of giving the benefit of the doubt to the accused, as it should be.
Your mantra is ridiculous because it conflates private disciplinary action with criminal justice procedure.
And I realize that innocent men being wrongfully expelled and their lives ruined doesn't bother the false rape accusation apologists, radical misandrists and others. And of course, anyone who is concerned about wrongful punishment of college students must be a "radical misogynist" and "rape apologist". :rolleyes:
"Concern" is an interesting term. Too bad you are not equally as "concerned" about rape victims.

You replied to my post in which I referenced this particular case. And it's pretty obvious you refuse to address it because it is an obvious travesty of justice and goes against your agenda to downplay wrongfully punished students.
Non-responsive claptrap.

In other words, you don't have a point and refuse to address any of my points.
More non-responsive claptrap.
Propose a way to improve reducing false negatives without at the same time increasing false positives and then I'll promote it. But all I see is attempts to increase punishment rate by making it more difficult for the accused students to defend themselves.
There is no need to provide even more evidence that you are not interested in promoting improvements in the discipline of actual rapists.

Not at all. To radical feminists male students being allowed to adequately defend themselves from rape accusations is an example of "rape culture".
And yet another hyperbolic rhetorical statement.

Google it. I will not present it for you on a platter, at least not until you address my points which you keep avoiding because they do not fit into your skewed world view.
I am not surprised you refuse to substantiate your claim of fact.
 
Derec, you are aware that Title IX was enacted in 1972, right?

And they keep cranking up the rules to give the enforcers something to do.

Riiiiight.

Same thing as the drug war. We got saddled with the current insanity because it gave all those alcohol cops something to do when prohibition was repealed.

Enforcers fight tooth and nail to preserve their mission (or get a similar replacement) whether or not it's needed.
 
Derec, you are aware that Title IX was enacted in 1972, right?

And they keep cranking up the rules to give the enforcers something to do.

Riiiiight.

Same thing as the drug war. We got saddled with the current insanity because it gave all those alcohol cops something to do when prohibition was repealed.

Enforcers fight tooth and nail to preserve their mission (or get a similar replacement) whether or not it's needed.
Hey, I feel you, bro. The man is always trying to keep you down and bitches be crazy. It's hard out there for a pimp.
 
Hey, I feel you, bro. The man is always trying to keep you down and bitches be crazy. It's hard out there for a pimp.

Actually, things are quite good for pimps. Free women, easy money and you get to wear an assortment of hats which most other guys can't pull off.
 
Hey, I feel you, bro. The man is always trying to keep you down and bitches be crazy. It's hard out there for a pimp.

Actually, things are quite good for pimps. Free women, easy money and you get to wear an assortment of hats which most other guys can't pull off.

Hustle and flow, baby. Hustle and flow.
 
Derec agreed that differing levels of inebriation would bring about differing abilities to know what was happening, to make decisions, etc. Do you agree? So if one person is somewhat inebriated: tipsy/buzzed/a bit happy but still able to know what was going on and to be rational and the other person was having trouble walking, slurring words, vomiting, perhaps passing out: would you assign the same level of responsibility to each of them? Surely one has greater control than the other, with the second person pretty clearly being unable to give consent.

I'm interested in addressing the situation he keeps bringing up. The two are both equally drunk. The two are equally consenting at the time, although one can argue that they are both unable to give consent due to alcohol. Everything is equal except one of the two has a Y chromosome.

So, who is guilty of rape in that situation?

And still this particular question is being ignored.
 
In fact, more than one published study has demonstrated that in most cases, the rapist is not drunk, although the victim frequently was. In fact, the rapist tends to target vulnerable (i.e. drunk) victims.

So much for regretted drunken hook ups.

No, like most studies on actual rape, those are looking mostly at convicted rapists who are mostly violent rapist that target strangers and are often serial rapists, and are not remotely similar to the kinds of date rape accusations between parties that know each other and were hanging out with the person that this thread is focussed upon (and in fact where the "victim" often hangs out with and has sex with the "rapist" after the incident that you and pseudo-researchers like Mary Koss in her Ms Magazine "study"). It is extremely unlikely that even a single case in the study you are referring to was one in which the a "too drunk to consent" argument was even relevant since its only used in cases like date rape where the facts otherwise are consistent with consensual sex, and thus her intoxication is used to equate any sex with rape, regardless of all other facts.
 
UPDATE:

After uproar, St. Louis paper drops Will column

The St. Louis Post-Dispatch has dropped columnist George Will and told readers that his provocative column on sexual assault on college campuses was a factor in the decision.

“The change has been under consideration for several months, but a column published June 5, in which Mr. Will suggested that sexual assault victims on college campuses enjoy a privileged status, made the decision easier,” the editor’s note read. “The column was offensive and inaccurate; we apologize for publishing it.”
 
In fact, more than one published study has demonstrated that in most cases, the rapist is not drunk, although the victim frequently was. In fact, the rapist tends to target vulnerable (i.e. drunk) victims.

So much for regretted drunken hook ups.

No, like most studies on actual rape, those are looking mostly at convicted rapists who are mostly violent rapist that target strangers and are often serial rapists, and are not remotely similar to the kinds of date rape accusations between parties that know each other and were hanging out with the person that this thread is focussed upon (and in fact where the "victim" often hangs out with and has sex with the "rapist" after the incident that you and pseudo-researchers like Mary Koss in her Ms Magazine "study"). It is extremely unlikely that even a single case in the study you are referring to was one in which the a "too drunk to consent" argument was even relevant since its only used in cases like date rape where the facts otherwise are consistent with consensual sex, and thus her intoxication is used to equate any sex with rape, regardless of all other facts.

I have no idea what you are talking about, and neither do you.
 
Derec agreed that differing levels of inebriation would bring about differing abilities to know what was happening, to make decisions, etc. Do you agree? So if one person is somewhat inebriated: tipsy/buzzed/a bit happy but still able to know what was going on and to be rational and the other person was having trouble walking, slurring words, vomiting, perhaps passing out: would you assign the same level of responsibility to each of them? Surely one has greater control than the other, with the second person pretty clearly being unable to give consent.

I'm interested in addressing the situation he keeps bringing up. The two are both equally drunk. The two are equally consenting at the time, although one can argue that they are both unable to give consent due to alcohol. Everything is equal except one of the two has a Y chromosome.

So, who is guilty of rape in that situation?

And still this particular question is being ignored.

The question hasn't been ignored. It's been answered several times in several different threads.

If they are both so drunk neither one could give meaningful consent, then each one of them had non-consensual sexual contact with another person. They could both be charged under certain state laws. They could both be expelled from a college or university that enforces a student code of conduct that forbids non-consensual sexual activities.

It's really not that complicated. What happens when two drivers are equally drunk and crash their cars into each other? What happens when two parents are equally drunk and neither one is watching the kids when they go out to play in traffic? What happens when two employees get equally drunk at the office Christmas party and break the copier trying to get a picture of their naked butts? They both face serious consequences, that's what happens.

"I was too drunk to know my partner was too drunk to know" might get you off the hook at a university disciplinary hearing, but then again, it might not. People are responsible for their actions, drunk or sober, and a Tu Quoque fallacy doesn't change things.
 
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Derec agreed that differing levels of inebriation would bring about differing abilities to know what was happening, to make decisions, etc. Do you agree? So if one person is somewhat inebriated: tipsy/buzzed/a bit happy but still able to know what was going on and to be rational and the other person was having trouble walking, slurring words, vomiting, perhaps passing out: would you assign the same level of responsibility to each of them? Surely one has greater control than the other, with the second person pretty clearly being unable to give consent.

I'm interested in addressing the situation he keeps bringing up. The two are both equally drunk. The two are equally consenting at the time, although one can argue that they are both unable to give consent due to alcohol. Everything is equal except one of the two has a Y chromosome.

So, who is guilty of rape in that situation?

And still this particular question is being ignored.

The question hasn't been ignored. It's been answered several times in several different threads.

If they are both so drunk neither one could give meaningful consent, then each one of them had non-consensual sexual contact with another person. They could both be charged under certain state laws. They could both be expelled from a college or university that enforces a student code of conduct that forbids non-consensual sexual activities.

It's really not that complicated. What happens when two drivers are equally drunk and crash their cars into each other? What happens when two parents are equally drunk and neither one is watching the kids when they go out to play in traffic? What happens when two employees get equally drunk at the office Christmas party and break the copier trying to get a picture of their naked butts? They both face serious consequences, that's what happens.

"I was too drunk to know my partner was too drunk to know" might get you off the hook at a university disciplinary hearing, but then again, it might not. People are responsible for their actions, drunk or sober, and a Tu Quoque fallacy doesn't change things.

You realise how absurd this is, right? According to you, the parties to a drunken hookup should both show up at the cop shop the following morning and admit they are rapists and were raped, by the same sexual encounter.
 
If they are both so drunk neither one could give meaningful consent, then each one of them had non-consensual sexual contact with another person.
Then why aren't they both being expelled instead of only the males? Sauce for the gander should be sauce for the goose!

I instead think that threshold of "too drunk to consent" should be set sufficiently high as to not include consensual drunken hookups that are rather common, especially among the young. If a girl can plan to have sex, can walk to the guy's place with him and has enough fine motor control to put a condom on him (all things Walker was able to do and did voluntarily) then she certainly should not be considered "too drunk to consent" even if her friends, when questioned a year later, said that she "appeared drunk".
 
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Derec agreed that differing levels of inebriation would bring about differing abilities to know what was happening, to make decisions, etc. Do you agree? So if one person is somewhat inebriated: tipsy/buzzed/a bit happy but still able to know what was going on and to be rational and the other person was having trouble walking, slurring words, vomiting, perhaps passing out: would you assign the same level of responsibility to each of them? Surely one has greater control than the other, with the second person pretty clearly being unable to give consent.

I'm interested in addressing the situation he keeps bringing up. The two are both equally drunk. The two are equally consenting at the time, although one can argue that they are both unable to give consent due to alcohol. Everything is equal except one of the two has a Y chromosome.

So, who is guilty of rape in that situation?

And still this particular question is being ignored.

The question hasn't been ignored. It's been answered several times in several different threads.

If they are both so drunk neither one could give meaningful consent, then each one of them had non-consensual sexual contact with another person. They could both be charged under certain state laws. They could both be expelled from a college or university that enforces a student code of conduct that forbids non-consensual sexual activities.

It's really not that complicated. What happens when two drivers are equally drunk and crash their cars into each other? What happens when two parents are equally drunk and neither one is watching the kids when they go out to play in traffic? What happens when two employees get equally drunk at the office Christmas party and break the copier trying to get a picture of their naked butts? They both face serious consequences, that's what happens.

"I was too drunk to know my partner was too drunk to know" might get you off the hook at a university disciplinary hearing, but then again, it might not. People are responsible for their actions, drunk or sober, and a Tu Quoque fallacy doesn't change things.

You realise how absurd this is, right? According to you, the parties to a drunken hookup should both show up at the cop shop the following morning and admit they are rapists and were raped, by the same sexual encounter.

According to me, both parties to a drunken hookup should have an "Oh, shit!" moment when they sober up. If it happens that no one thinks they were raped, they should both count their blessings. But if it happens that someone thinks the sex was nonconsensual and alerts the authorities, they both have reason to be worried. The evidence of non-consent might be muddled enough that they can avoid criminal charges, but it might be more than enough to get them both fired, expelled, or censured.
 
If they are both so drunk neither one could give meaningful consent, then each one of them had non-consensual sexual contact with another person.
Then why aren't they both being expelled instead of only the males? Sauce for the gander should be sauce for the goose!

Sauce for the goose is good for the gander. If they are both equally drunk, and both engage in sexual contact, they should both bear the consequences. But if they are unequally drunk, then the more sober one can be held more responsible for the outcome, especially if the more sober one is the one initiating sexual activity.

I instead think that threshold of "too drunk to consent" should be set sufficiently high as to not include consensual drunken hookups that are rather common, especially among the young. If a girl can plan to have sex, can walk to the guy's place with him and has enough fine motor control to put a condom on him (all things Walker was able to do and did voluntarily) then she certainly should not be considered "too drunk to consent" even if her friends, when questioned a year later, said that she "appeared drunk".

Clear, fair, and reasonable standards would be a big help. But "too drunk to consent to sex" will always be an issue for the same reason "too drunk to sign a mortgage" and "too drunk to enlist in the Navy" are.
 
In fact, more than one published study has demonstrated that in most cases, the rapist is not drunk, although the victim frequently was. In fact, the rapist tends to target vulnerable (i.e. drunk) victims.

So much for regretted drunken hook ups.

No, like most studies on actual rape, those are looking mostly at convicted rapists who are mostly violent rapist that target strangers and are often serial rapists, and are not remotely similar to the kinds of date rape accusations between parties that know each other and were hanging out with the person that this thread is focussed upon (and in fact where the "victim" often hangs out with and has sex with the "rapist" after the incident that you and pseudo-researchers like Mary Koss in her Ms Magazine "study"). It is extremely unlikely that even a single case in the study you are referring to was one in which the a "too drunk to consent" argument was even relevant since its only used in cases like date rape where the facts otherwise are consistent with consensual sex, and thus her intoxication is used to equate any sex with rape, regardless of all other facts.

I have no idea what you are talking about, and neither do you.

I know exactly what I am talking about. It's unsurprising you do not since your posts show a grave ignorance of thereality that the term "rape" includes such extremely qualitatively distinct acts with minimal overlap in psychology or behavior. What might be true of one type of rape or rapist cannot be applied to rape or rapist in general or of other types. So, unless your claimed study shows that intoxication is rare specifically among college students accused of date raping known acquaintances, then it has no relevance to the discussion at hand. I doubt your study does show this, because its easy to find reviews of the literature on acquaintance rape that directly refute your claim and show just the opposite.
Thus, across the disparate populations studied, researchers consistently have found that approximately one-half of all sexual assaults are committed by men who have been drinking alcohol. Depending on the sample studied and the measures used, the estimates for alcohol use among perpetrators have ranged from 34 to 74 percent (Abbey et al. 1994; Crowell and Burgess 1996).
...

Finally, alcohol consumption by perpetrators and victims tends to co-occur that is, when one of them is drinking, the other one is generally drinking as well (Abbey et al. 1998; Harrington and Leitenberg 1994). Rarely is only the victim drinking alcohol. This finding is not surprising, because in social situations (e.g., in bars or at parties), drinking tends to be a shared activity. However, this finding complicates researchers’ efforts to disentangle the unique effects of alcohol consumption on the perpetrators’ versus the victims’ behavior.
 
According to me, both parties to a drunken hookup should have an "Oh, shit!" moment when they sober up. If it happens that no one thinks they were raped, they should both count their blessings.

But what do you think? Do you think it is necessary for a victim to want to press charges for a rape to be a rape? I don't think so.

In the scenario I posted, neither of the victim-slash-rapists thinks they were raped. But surely it is your interpretation that they did, in fact, rape each other, and if you knew it, you should want them both to be prosecuted.

Or are you soft on rapists?
 
UPDATE:

After uproar, St. Louis paper drops Will column

The St. Louis Post-Dispatch has dropped columnist George Will and told readers that his provocative column on sexual assault on college campuses was a factor in the decision.

“The change has been under consideration for several months, but a column published June 5, in which Mr. Will suggested that sexual assault victims on college campuses enjoy a privileged status, made the decision easier,” the editor’s note read. “The column was offensive and inaccurate; we apologize for publishing it.”
good
 
According to me, both parties to a drunken hookup should have an "Oh, shit!" moment when they sober up. If it happens that no one thinks they were raped, they should both count their blessings.

But what do you think? Do you think it is necessary for a victim to want to press charges for a rape to be a rape? I don't think so.

In the scenario I posted, neither of the victim-slash-rapists thinks they were raped. But surely it is your interpretation that they did, in fact, rape each other, and if you knew it, you should want them both to be prosecuted.

Or are you soft on rapists?

In the scenario you posted they both had non-consensual sexual contact. They are both liable for that decision and face consequences up to and including being convicted of rape, expelled from school, fired from their jobs, and told they have disgraced themselves, their families, and their communities. Being drunk might be a mitigating factor but it's no excuse. The other party being just as drunk might also be a mitigating factor but that's not an excuse, either.

Bottom line: you are responsible for the choices you make and the activities you engage in, whether you're drunk or not. If you choose to have sex with someone too drunk to consent to it, you are responsible for that decision, and it might prove to be a very, very bad one.
 
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